- 2 days ago
Outrageous Season 1 Episode 4- Hating and Loving - FULL
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00:00Favre taught us all to drive when we
00:29were young, which gave us a measure of independence not enjoyed by most women in those days, and
00:35Debo was his last pupil.
00:37And now into third.
00:40No, not fast, not fast.
00:42Third, that's it.
00:43Yes, very good.
00:44Yes, now, faster, faster, and stop.
00:51Good, Nathan.
00:53Very good.
00:54Now, reverse.
00:56Reverse.
00:56To the left and up, up.
00:57Now, on we go.
01:02Decker was coming out into society in a few months' time, with Debo just two years behind
01:07her.
01:08We were all growing up, carving our own lives.
01:11Of course, there were bound to be disagreements between us about things like politics, but
01:16nothing that could fundamentally threaten the deep bonds of family, surely.
01:20Everything all right?
01:21No, no, not really.
01:24David!
01:25I'm so hungry.
01:26David!
01:26Lunchtime!
01:27Wash your hands, girls.
01:29Wash your hands now.
01:29And run.
01:31Come on, Decker.
01:31Run.
01:32Run.
01:35Okay.
01:35Dear Marv and Favre, yesterday was the most wonderful and beautiful day of my life.
01:47I went to lunch, as usual, at the Osteria Bavaria, hoping to catch sight of the Führer
01:53again, and he was there with two other men.
01:57After a few minutes, one of them came over and said to me, the Führer would like to speak
02:03to you.
02:03No!
02:04What?
02:04I got up and went over to him, and he stood up and saluted, and shook hands with me, and
02:10invited me to sit down next to him.
02:13What?
02:13I don't believe it.
02:14I talked to him for about half an hour.
02:17It's a joke, surely.
02:19I told him I was a British fascist.
02:22And he asked if there were very many of us, and I said yes, and said that he should come
02:26and visit England, and he laughed.
02:29He said he would love to, but he was afraid there would be a revolution if he did.
02:33He said London was the best city in the world.
02:37We talked about Wagner, and he asked if I'd ever been to Bayreuth, and I said no, but
02:42I should love to.
02:43And he told one of his men to make a note of that.
02:46Dad!
02:47Hello, you.
02:50Oh, no!
02:53Thanks so much for coming to Munich.
02:56Of course.
02:56I'm the luckiest girl in the world, aren't I?
02:59No one else would understand but you.
03:00I'm so happy that I wouldn't mind a bit dying.
03:04It's wonderful.
03:06I'm so proud of you.
03:07It was just pure heaven.
03:09He was so nice to me, and not at all grand or conceited.
03:13And when you think, he's the most powerful man in the world, isn't he?
03:17And you've met him, Bobo.
03:20And you must meet in two honks.
03:22I'll introduce you.
03:23I would love that.
03:27I mean, one has to ask why, of all the people in the restaurant, did he pick Bobo.
03:31Well, you must admit, she does have a certain look about her.
03:34Do you think that he wants her as a...
03:36As a what?
03:37Well, you know, as a girlfriend.
03:39Oh, stop it.
03:40Has he got a girlfriend already?
03:42Oh, Lord.
03:42We can't have two sisters, both mistresses to fascist leaders.
03:45What are the chances?
03:47God, no.
03:48Anyway, Diana's there.
03:49She'll protect her.
03:50Is she?
03:51Yes.
03:52Unity called her the same day.
03:53She got straight in her car and drove to Munich.
03:56Her car?
03:57Moseley bought it for her.
03:58A Christmas present, she says.
04:01Really?
04:01Oh, really.
04:03You two still not speaking?
04:05We will.
04:06Don't worry.
04:07I'm just letting her cool off a bit.
04:09So, where are you motoring off to next, Pam?
04:13Bratislava.
04:14Dreamy.
04:15Mm.
04:16And you?
04:18You seem to be here an awful lot.
04:20You fled the marital home.
04:21Only temporarily.
04:22We're a bit short of furniture at the moment.
04:25You know what this goes to show, don't you?
04:30What?
04:30The power of persistence.
04:39What does he want from her?
04:43Is she safe?
04:44Should we be bringing her home?
04:46She's done nothing wrong, exactly.
04:48I should think it's just a one-off.
04:50I'm sure he's far too busy to waste his time chatting to young foreign students.
04:55They've got a damn country to run.
04:57Anyway, Diana's there keeping an eye.
04:59Oh, yeah.
05:01By the way, there was a telephone call today from the estate agent's office.
05:07Oh, yes?
05:08You left your gloves behind.
05:10They're keeping them for you.
05:13Yes.
05:14Yes, I, um...
05:16Yes, I did go in briefly.
05:18Why?
05:18There's someone interested in the house, apparently.
05:24This house?
05:25Hmm.
05:26Yes, just renting it for six months.
05:30Name of McKinnon.
05:31Our family home?
05:33Probably won't come to it.
05:34It's just in case we need to raise some cash temporarily.
05:38And the fellow offered a decent sum.
05:41When we moved in here, you said we'd never leave.
05:43Carried out in a box, you said.
05:45Well, I can't control the value of stocks and shares.
05:49There's a depression going on out there in the world, you know.
05:53And our living expenses are sky damn high.
05:56I'm not blaming you.
05:58But we still have two girls to send out into the world.
06:02Balls, dresses, decas about to be presented at court.
06:06You think I don't realise that?
06:07Of course I do.
06:08We've got to give the young ones every chance, just as we did the others.
06:13Fat Lord Goody did the others.
06:15Not a decent marriage between them.
06:17David.
06:18Yes?
06:18All I'm asking is that you don't make these big decisions without discussing them with me first.
06:24I mean, that's fair, isn't it?
06:48Oh dear.
07:14Oh dear.
07:18Oh dear.
07:48Oh, hello darling.
07:53Welcome home.
07:56What's going on?
07:57I am getting ready for the morning.
08:01Day out?
08:03I'm starting a new job.
08:05With another bank in the city.
08:08Yes, I know, it's about bloody time too.
08:13Come here.
08:16Come on.
08:18I'm sorry.
08:27I know I've been a total arse lately.
08:31When you were at home, Mary and Tony came over, saw the state of the place, read me the riot act.
08:38Mary said I had to get a grip, act like a real husband and bring home some bacon because if I didn't, I'd lose you.
08:43And I don't want to lose you.
08:49Cranky, good old Mary.
08:51Then Tony introduced me to a chap who knows in the city and, well, job just fell into place.
08:56I'm going to do my very best to make it stick this time, I'm going to do my very best to make it stick this time and get you some furniture bag.
09:02Well, that would be lovely.
09:05Good.
09:08Cup of tea?
09:09What news from the family?
09:14Well, it looks like Unity is making friends in Munich.
09:23Race yourself.
09:24I'm so glad you're here again, lad.
09:29I wouldn't miss it for the world.
09:31Have you said anything to him about Mosley and me?
09:35Of course not.
09:36All I've said is that we, our family, know him, socially.
09:40Good.
09:41Have you told Mosley you're meeting the Fuhrer tonight?
09:44Not yet, no.
09:46Why not?
09:48He'll be thrilled, wouldn't he?
09:50It's complicated, but we're...
09:54It seems he's resumed his affair with his wife's sister.
09:58Oh, no.
09:59I thought that was all over.
10:01So did I.
10:03Oh, I am sorry.
10:05Oh, Bobo, I was just...
10:10Who he is.
10:12I knew when I met him what he was like.
10:16He has this physical compulsion, some men do.
10:19And sometimes the greater the man, the greater the compulsion.
10:23But still, it must be awful to think of him with her.
10:27Occasionally, yes.
10:29But I know deep down that he loves me, needs me much more than he needs her.
10:36Well, of course he loves you more.
10:39You're you.
10:43The thing is, she's the emotional type.
10:46Highly volatile.
10:48And she knows nothing of politics, which is his life, of course.
10:52And so, essentially, she's a drain on him.
10:55Whereas you are an asset to him.
10:58I'd certainly like to be of real practical use to him, if I can.
11:01And how can you?
11:03Well, the main thing the party needs now is money.
11:06A source of funding, a sponsor.
11:08What about the Führer?
11:11Yes, of course, he would be perfect.
11:14But Mosley's been trying to get a meeting with him for months with no luck.
11:17But if you could get him a meeting?
11:20Well, we'll see.
11:24Let's see how your new friends here take to me first, shall we?
11:28Good evening, ladies.
11:30Your car waits.
11:32Thank you, Erich.
11:34This is my sister.
11:36Mrs. Guinness, of course, a pleasure.
11:38Good evening.
11:39Shall we?
11:42Don't worry.
11:43The Führer's going to love you.
11:53The first presentation party of the year is held at Buckingham Palace.
11:57Up the mall came a long procession of cars.
11:59And passers-by had a glimpse of some of the 600 debutantes who were to be presented.
12:04The weather was anything but bright.
12:06But on this cold March day, nothing could dim the high spirits of these, the youngest guests of the King and Queen, on the threshold of their first season.
12:16Your Majesties, may I present to you, Lady Reedsdale, the Honorable Mrs. Peter Rod, the Honorable Jessica Freeman Mitford.
12:26Smile, darling.
12:28They look like old stuffed puppets with crowns on.
12:32They don't say anything.
12:34You don't say anything.
12:35Just two curtsies and you're out.
12:37Nix, please.
12:38I mean, what's the point?
12:39There is none whatsoever, darling.
12:41It's completely meaningless.
12:42It's incredibly important.
12:44It marks the fact that you're now grown up.
12:47The start of the cattle market, you mean?
12:49Just hundreds of girls jostling about, waiting to be auctioned off to the highest bidding husband.
12:54Ready?
12:55Decker, it's the beginning of your social life.
12:59The point is to make connections.
13:02To meet people of both sexes.
13:04To go to parties and make friends, a commodity of which you're in very short supply.
13:09It's all small talk.
13:11No one I've met so far has any interest in anything that actually matters in this world.
13:16Ready?
13:18And they all look the same.
13:19I honestly, I can't tell any of them about.
13:21It's probably your eyesight, darling.
13:23You've ruined it with all that reading.
13:24Perhaps I just need glasses.
13:26Absolutely not at your age.
13:27Spectacles are terrible for young people and awfully expensive.
13:31No, no, no.
13:32The good body will right itself as it always does.
13:34And you'll probably see things better as time goes on.
13:37Shall we try a smile this time?
13:40Decker!
13:41Oh, marvellous.
13:43One of the family's been sent to prison.
13:45Oh, who on earth is that?
13:46It's that second cousin you took a fancy to, Decker.
13:49Esmond Romilly.
13:50Winston's nephew.
13:51Prison? What for?
13:52He showed up blind drunk with a friend at his parents' house.
13:56And, er...
13:58Good old Auntie Nellie called the police.
14:00Oh, surely not.
14:02And at the next day's court appearance, she told the judge he was a communist agitator
14:06who had become uncontrollable at home.
14:09So the judge sentenced him to six weeks in a remand home for juveniles.
14:13No!
14:14Oh, that's awful of Nellie taking her own son to court.
14:17Romilly, 17, said he was going to use the time to further his revolutionary studies.
14:23Hurrah for him!
14:24Thank you very much, ladies. I think we got it.
14:29Well done, darling. Well done.
14:31Hello.
14:32You must be one of those Mitford girls.
14:34Derek Jackson.
14:36You must be the youngest one. Not, er, not Jessica. Rebecca?
14:37Deborah?
14:38Yes, that's it. Of course.
14:39I know your brother Tom from Oxford.
14:41And I met your sisters. Diana and... Who's that one always hurtling about in that little sports car?
14:45Pamela
14:46Pamela
14:55Pamela
14:58Pam. Yes, that's it. Of course.
15:00I know your brother Tom from Oxford. And I met your sisters at Diana and... Who's that one always hurtling about in that little sports car?
15:07Pamela
15:08who's that one always hurtling about in that little sports car Pamela Pam yes
15:13that's it I mean I've often seen you at hunting too you're an excellent horse
15:19woman absolute natural I think I've seen you out riding too you ride in short
15:26leathers like a jockey I am a jockey actually well sometimes at least I've
15:30ridden in the Grand National really mm-hmm twice although my real work is as
15:36a scientist at Oxford I'm an atomic physicist Wow yes it's actually worth
15:43being one just to see the look on people's faces when I say it how old are
15:47you Debra I'm nearly 16 how old are you excellent excellent Debra race you to the
15:57gate
16:06so I got you a present whilst I was in Munich hmm oh darling very jealous of you didn't use to do that
16:23where is it in Munich well spilling can mean it don't suppose it's going to make its way here
16:33perhaps is it no no I'm afraid you'll have to go there to get it but I think you'll agree
16:40it's a journey worth making
16:42Hitler yes he said he'd be delighted to meet you whenever you are next in Munich oh my god that is
17:01something unity helped me of course she and I have been telling them all about you paving the way you
17:09might want to learn a few words of German beforehand he doesn't speak in English is he no of course not
17:14well I have an interpreter no doubt I just find them better my German gets the more relaxed and informal
17:21conversations become well how relaxed and informal are you getting actually he's invited me to the
17:27opera in Berlin next week has he hmm there's the two of you see oh I'm sure there'll be some bodyguards
17:35around I'm not sure I like the idea of spending time alone well
17:47there are certain people I don't like you spending time alone with I've learned we don't always get
17:56what we want in life do we darling to share and finally the day I dreaded was upon us nothing for it
18:17but to smile well there you are oh thank you so much I shall treasure it well come along let us all
18:25raise a glass to our distinguished authoress cheers cheers thank you both so much for coming and
18:32preventing this from being the most depressing publication day in history can I just say that
18:36I offered to throw a party Joss offered for a party and the publishers themselves I could hardly have a party
18:40to celebrate a book which has caused so much trouble well you didn't cause it darling it's your bloody
18:44sisters attaching themselves to fascist leaders I'll tell you better off without them anyway they're
18:49completely overreacting and the book is only a very gentle satire I've written to my sisters
18:52explained apologized grovelled and it's done no good well I for one I'm really looking forward to reading it I think
19:00everything you write is an absolute scream here here darling aren't these two the best of friends
19:04without them I wouldn't have a job and you certainly would not have a cake thank you both so much to
19:12friendship
19:13right you like this yes please it's delicious you've outdone yourself Tony
19:21there you are Stubbs wondered if you fancied a spin in the car she's oh my lord
19:39Favre will die if he sees you he'll literally have a fit and die do you think they'll hang me for murder?
19:58probably at least you look lovely on the front pages go like this that's better less is more
20:15anyway Favre won't see me it's just for special occasions oh yes where are you off to? I'm going fishing
20:23fishing and lipstick do not normally with Derek promise you won't tell in fact could you come with
20:32Derek Jackson he's twice your age stubby what on earth are you doing with him? I'm not doing anything
20:38with him we're friends he asked me about our trout stream so I said I'd show him it oh do come he said
20:46he'd love to meet you properly he says of all my sisters you seem the least bonkers
20:51what a charmer
20:54so Miss Pamela your sister tells me you spent the last year or so driving all over Europe
21:08that's right awfully dangerous for a young lady driving abroad alone isn't it?
21:13not if you know how to change a wheel
21:15I meant without a chaperone a protector not if you know how to protect yourself
21:22ah I see you're the go-getter independent type take no prisoners eh right here we are it's a nice
21:31spot isn't it and which type are you Derek? oh Derek's the rude type he hates the way that most
21:38people blither on in meaningless small talk and he's not afraid to tell them and if that means
21:44that they think he's an arrogant pig well that's their problem isn't that right Derek?
21:49ha ha ha ha guilty as charged I'm afraid your sister has me to a D
21:58your sister has me to a D
22:00In Berlin, Dr. Goebbels, one of Hitler's chief ministers, makes the sensational announcement
22:23that Germany is to reintroduce conscription to the armed forces in direct contravention
22:29of the terms of the Versailles peace treaty.
22:34This news sends a worrying message to the rest of Europe.
22:40Is Germany once again preparing for war?
22:52The living room was on the first floor.
22:57He always keeps the curtains closed.
22:59Even during the day.
23:00Why?
23:01In case of snipers.
23:03So he's in there now?
23:07Yes.
23:08With her.
23:09Ava?
23:10Yeah.
23:11She arrived about an hour ago.
23:14Will she stay all day?
23:15All night?
23:16Probably.
23:17She usually leaves before it gets light.
23:18How long have they been?
23:19Two years, maybe?
23:20But he's never seen a public with her.
23:22Why's that?
23:23She's just a shop girl.
23:24She knows nothing of government, the economy, or of the Jewish problem.
23:37She doesn't understand politics at all.
23:38But politics is his life.
23:40What do they talk about?
23:41I don't know.
23:42Perhaps they don't do so much talking.
23:47Sex is just a compulsion.
23:51A great leader needs a woman who understands his cause, who is wholly committed to it.
23:58Do you think he loves her?
24:02God knows.
24:03Look.
24:04We should leave.
24:05They patrol these gardens.
24:07Come.
24:18Will you help me write a letter?
24:20I need to get the German perfect.
24:22To the Fuhrer?
24:23No.
24:24No.
24:25To the newspaper.
24:26Der Störmer.
24:27No.
24:28Please.
24:29Dear Störmer, I am a British woman fascist who has lived in Munich for several months.
24:50I should like to express my admiration for Germany's approach to the Jewish problem.
24:55Unfortunately, the English have no notion of the danger.
24:59PHONE RINGS
25:00PHONE RINGS
25:01Hello?
25:02Lady Riester.
25:03The papers.
25:04Yes.
25:05Yes.
25:06Absolutely not.
25:07Certainly not.
25:08No.
25:09PHONE RINGS
25:10PHONE RINGS
25:11Absolutely not.
25:12Certainly not.
25:13No.
25:14PHONE RINGS
25:16Sir!
25:17Sir!
25:18Sir, what do you think of your daughter's letter?
25:19Do you agree with her use, sir?
25:20I have nothing to say.
25:21Do you stand inside?
25:22Yes, sir!
25:23Is it true she's hit this mystery?
25:24Drive on!
25:25Unity, you're to come home at once.
25:26You're to take the very next train and talk to me.
25:27You're to take the very next train and talk to me.
25:28No.
25:29Absolutely no one.
25:30Do you understand?
25:31No!
25:32No!
25:33Do you agree with her use, sir?
25:34Yes, sir!
25:35I have nothing to say.
25:36True stands inside.
25:37Sir!
25:38Is it true she's hit this mystery?
25:40Drive on!
25:41Unity, you're to come home at once.
25:43You're to take the very next train and talk to no one.
25:46Absolutely no one until you arrive
25:48Do you understand?
25:49No!
25:50No!
25:51I refuse to apologize.
26:16It's not just your father and I.
26:19The whole country is angry with you now.
26:21I don't care.
26:23Those are simply my opinions.
26:25You're in it!
26:25What on earth do you think you're afraid?
26:54What right, what right do you have for splashing your revolting atmosphere and your utterly
27:01unfounded opinions across every town in this time I've ever lived?
27:05I don't care.
27:06I don't care.
27:07I don't care.
27:08I don't care.
27:09I don't care.
27:10I don't care.
27:11I don't care.
27:12I don't care.
27:13I don't care.
27:14I don't care.
27:15I don't care.
27:16I don't care.
27:17I don't care.
27:18I don't care.
27:19I don't care.
27:20I don't care.
27:21I don't care.
27:22I don't care.
27:23I don't care.
27:24I don't care.
27:25I don't care.
27:26Oh.
27:27She had that look about her.
27:28You know how she gets.
27:29Stoney.
27:30I mean, where did all this hatred come from?
27:31She knows nothing about the Jews.
27:32I don't care.
27:33Wait.
27:34Bobo, where are you going?
27:39To London.
27:40To stay with Diana.
27:41I'm obviously not welcome here.
27:43Oh, don't be silly.
27:44Of course you're welcome.
27:45I shall walk to the station.
27:46And please tell Nancy that I have not forgiven her for publishing that book.
27:50That book?
27:51Good God!
27:52What about this letter?
27:53Bobo!
27:54Oh!
28:02It's no good me ordering her back, only for you to tell her she's not welcome here.
28:08How on earth are we going to get to the bottom of why she's said those ghastly things,
28:13unless she's here to talk to?
28:14There have to be consequences for her actions, or how will she ever learn?
28:18She's not a child anymore.
28:20Banishing her won't work.
28:21Well, what then?
28:27I don't know.
28:29Maybe.
28:30Darling, we have to reason with her.
28:33Reason with Bobo, hmm?
28:36We have to try.
28:37How else are we going to keep our family together?
28:52Go away!
28:56Hello, hello.
28:57Well, it's you.
28:58Well, she's been, she's taken the medicine, and she's gone again.
29:04I saw her.
29:06I couldn't bear to speak to her.
29:09Just why, why, why do you think she'd say these awful hateful things?
29:15I suppose, well, you know how much she idolizes him, and now suddenly she's having lunch with him,
29:24and it's gone to her head.
29:25She'd probably say anything to impress him.
29:27Hopefully the scales will eventually fall from her eyes.
29:30They won't.
29:31I know her.
29:32She'll stick to it.
29:34Ah, Pamela, did you come in?
29:36We're having such fun.
29:37Did you get the call to return from Mav?
29:39All hands on debt.
29:40Hmm.
29:41Well, unity's really done it this time.
29:45The baddest a bad girl can possibly be.
29:49Do you think she really means it?
29:51It's hard to tell.
29:52But I went to visit her in Munich a couple of weeks ago, and she took me to tea with him.
29:59Hitler.
30:00What?
30:01Pamela, how could you?
30:02Well, I was curious.
30:04I mean, come on, who wouldn't be?
30:06And?
30:07He struck me as very ordinary.
30:10Like a farmer, in his brown suit, sat in a tea room making chit-chat.
30:16Hard to believe he's this ruthless dictator with these awful views.
30:19But he is.
30:20But you know what the extraordinary thing was?
30:23Not Bobo's love for him, which is quite obvious, of course, but the fact that he's clearly enchanted by her.
30:29What?
30:30Yes.
30:31She makes him laugh.
30:32And you know what she's like.
30:34Just says whatever comes into her head.
30:36She's completely natural with him.
30:38Whereas I suppose most people are in awe.
30:41Nervous and on their best behaviour.
30:44Bobo isn't.
30:45Well, if you've met him, I don't see why I couldn't.
30:49Hitler?
30:50Um, you don't want to meet him, do you?
30:53Well, picture this.
30:55At close range, I could whip out a pistol and shoot him dead.
30:59Great scheme.
31:00And then you would immediately be shot dead by his guards.
31:04Maybe, but it would be worth it, wouldn't it?
31:06Er, no.
31:07No, Decker.
31:08Well, what do you do when someone you really love does something really, really awful and
31:21vile like this?
31:23That's a good question.
31:25Can you still love them?
31:30Perhaps we don't really get a choice about loving sisters.
31:38Maybe the love's just there in the background.
31:43And always will be, whether we like it or not.
31:48Oh, I am sorry for you and Favre.
32:06This really is beyond the pale.
32:08That's all I can hope is that Diana can talk some sense into her.
32:11Well, maybe...
32:13Maybe I could pop in and have a word with them.
32:15Yes, but aren't things rather difficult between you three at the moment?
32:18I don't expect Bobo to relent any time soon, but Diana's more reasonable.
32:24And, er, well, it's high time she and I cleared the air, isn't it?
32:27We are adults, after all.
32:28Well, tread very softly, won't you, darling?
32:30Yes, I will.
32:34Bye-bye, darling. Good luck.
32:39As the eldest, I knew it was up to me to be the bigger person and build a bridge.
32:53To pour oil on troubled waters.
32:58Hello.
33:18If you've come to see Unity, I'm afraid you've had a wasted journey.
33:22She says she has no intention of speaking to you.
33:24No, actually, it's... it's you I've come to see.
33:28How are you?
33:30Very well, thank you.
33:34How are the book sales going?
33:38It's sold remarkably badly, you'll be pleased to hear.
33:41And reviews have been indifferent, at best.
33:44Look, I'm... I'm truly sorry that it offended you both.
33:52Obviously, it's not what I set out to do.
33:57I'm actually in the middle of packing.
33:59I'm going to a dinner party tonight, and then I'm driving straight off to Moseley's place afterwards, so...
34:03I'm rather busy.
34:05Right.
34:06Listen, Mav wondered if you would have a quiet word with Unity about her letter
34:12and just explain to her why everyone's so upset about it,
34:15and perhaps encourage her to rethink what she's said if she clearly listens to you.
34:21Certainly not.
34:23She's an adult now, and she's entitled to her opinions.
34:25But...
34:27Nard, you cannot support what she said in that letter, all that hatred.
34:30I mean, you can't, can you?
34:31Look, her views are her own.
34:33If that's what she thinks, I don't see how I can change it.
34:36Oh, come on!
34:38You have a huge influence on her. You can't just, you can't just sit by and do nothing.
34:42You can't condone it.
34:43Neither Moseley nor I have anything against the Jews as a race.
34:47But what's happening in Germany, it's none of our business.
34:50What? This, this...
34:52This isn't you. This is Moseley speaking, isn't it?
34:54Don't be ridiculous.
34:55Well, it's not the girl I grew up with. It's not you.
34:57Don't tell me who I am or what I think!
35:01Just because you're the eldest...
35:03It's got nothing to do with that.
35:04Doesn't mean we have to fall in line behind you.
35:06We are all entitled to our own views, to be ourselves.
35:09Now, if you'll excuse me...
35:11But that's it. Since you met Moseley, you're not yourself at all.
35:13You've changed completely.
35:15You think you know me better than I know myself!
35:18Well, you don't!
35:20Just get out, will you?
35:22Now!
35:25Oh, don't worry. I'm going.
35:31I'm going.
36:01I'm going.
36:02Let's get in charge now!
36:21Come on.
36:23Good God, what are you doing here?
36:39I'm just about to have an early night.
36:41Sorry.
36:43You don't fancy a really strong drink instead, do you?
36:51Wait there.
36:53When they begin, the begin.
37:09I mean, Unity's always been an obstinate, obsessive creature who loves to shock.
37:14Diana, Diana's a sophisticated, intelligent woman, but now suddenly she can't complete
37:20a sentence without the word Mosley appearing in it.
37:22I mean, later tonight she's driving halfway across the country just to be with him.
37:25What on earth is the attraction?
37:27Fame, power, driving ambition, virility.
37:31All the age-old aphrodisiacs, I suppose.
37:34But refusing to condemn Unity's letter, that's just not her.
37:39She's always had lots of Jewish friends.
37:40You, for example.
37:41I mean, that's Mosley speaking.
37:43She can't have changed that much.
37:45Well, perhaps that's how it begins.
37:50I mean, Mosley started off as a perfectly reasonable politician, didn't he?
37:54I suppose so, yes.
37:55But then, power became more important to him than his principles.
37:59And to get power, as Hitler observed early on, it helps to have a scapegoat.
38:04A focus for people's hatred.
38:08And, well, the Jews have always been there.
38:14Oh, God, I'm sorry.
38:16This is too much.
38:16I shouldn't be bringing this up.
38:17No, no, no, no, no, no.
38:20We have to talk about it.
38:21We have to confront it.
38:27You know, my grandparents escaped the Ukraine 50 years ago.
38:33Came here.
38:35They had rocks thrown at their house.
38:37They were called filthy sheenies by their neighbors.
38:40And only once they moved, changed their name.
38:45Shed every outward sign that they were Jewish, really.
38:48Did they finally start to feel safe enough to build a life and have a family?
38:55So, so they were in hiding, really?
39:00In a way, yes.
39:03Yes, because there's always the fear.
39:06But because of that sacrifice, my parents got to grow up feeling like this is their home.
39:13And they passed that belonging, that feeling of safety onto us.
39:26And then, enter the fascists.
39:29And here we all are again.
39:31Right back to square one.
39:35Thanks to Moseley.
40:05How on earth did my attempt at reconciliation with Diana go so badly wrong that night?
40:23Did I go too far in accusing her of being Moseley's mouthpiece?
40:27Possibly.
40:28Should I have been able to keep my cool when provoked?
40:32Probably.
40:35And was it my fault she was so upset that night that she drank a lot more champagne than she should have?
40:48Definitely.
41:05Yeah, that's it.
41:18Ready?
41:19Ready?
41:20I don't know.
41:50I don't know.
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